
Addressing Southern Nevada’s Affordable Housing Crunch
Season 8 Episode 38 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
New efforts are underway to address Southern Nevada’s affordable housing crunch.
Many families in Southern Nevada are struggling to find affordable housing, but lawmakers are trying to address the problem by creating affordable and attainable housing around the state with a number of different programs designed to help builders and buyers.
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Nevada Week is a local public television program presented by Vegas PBS

Addressing Southern Nevada’s Affordable Housing Crunch
Season 8 Episode 38 | 26m 46sVideo has Closed Captions
Many families in Southern Nevada are struggling to find affordable housing, but lawmakers are trying to address the problem by creating affordable and attainable housing around the state with a number of different programs designed to help builders and buyers.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipNevada has an affordable housing problem, and it's an issue the state is spending more than $100 million to address.
Will it work?
That's this week on Nevada Week.
♪♪ -Support for Nevada Week is provided by Senator William H. Hernstadt and other supporters.
-Welcome to Nevada Week.
I'm Amber Renee Dixon.
Financing plays a pivotal role in the development of housing, and it's why the state is getting into the lending business.
Assembly Bill 540, one of Governor Joe Lombardo's bills last legislative session, established the Nevada Attainable Housing Account with the goal of functioning like a revolving fund so that money paid back on loans can be used to finance more housing in the future.
It's a move more states are taking to tackle the country's housing shortage.
And here to explain is Steve Aichroth, Administrator of the Nevada Division of Housing.
Steve, welcome to Nevada Week.
(Steve Aichroth) Thank you, Amber.
Thank you for having me.
-And AB540 certainly does a whole lot more in the affordable housing space in addition to this lending aspect, and we're going to cover all of it ahead.
But let's first take a step back.
And there are people who are moving to Nevada who say, Wait, the housing here is much more affordable than where I'm coming from.
How do you explain this issue to them?
-Well, ever since the pandemic really occurred, and post-pandemic, we've seen a great influx of folks from neighboring states, from all over the country, really, who see the opportunities in Nevada.
But it's causing a crunch, because we do have greater demand and not enough supply.
Now, that's happening even from places they're leaving, that there is a supply issue throughout the country.
And really that was the crux of AB540 was to increase supply for attainable funds, attainable housing for Nevadans.
-So it's a supply issue, and so the state, partly, is going to help developers build housing by giving them some financing.
And what kind of homes are we talking about here?
-So it really runs the gamut.
When we were looking at developing AB540, it was envisioned as being sort of holistic to cover everything from literally zero income folks up to 150% of AMI folks.
So that's-- -"AMI" being Area Median Income.
-Yes, sorry.
I'll try not to speak in housing vernacular.
-How would you simplify that, though?
That is the median of what people are making in-- -In a particular county in Nevada.
-And for Clark County, I believe that's about $94,000?
-Sound right, yeah.
-Typical family of four?
-Yes.
-Okay.
-Yeah, two earners.
So effectively, when it was developed, it was gone through what was the Governor's Housing Task Force.
And this was a group, and there was probably 20 to 30 of us forming this legislation before it was introduced to the state legislature.
And one of the things that we really focused on was creating home ownership opportunities for middle-income earners.
So part of it was peeled off.
It was originally 175 million.
So that's why we get to this wonky number of 133.
It was 175 million.
21 million was peeled off for rental assistance throughout the state of Nevada, and another 21 million was peeled off for supportive housing services, which the division is also administering.
So that left 133 million that you now see in the bill as it was passed.
-Okay.
And so that is for housing for lower-income folks that's going to be built as well as, would you say, middle income?
Oh, 100%, yes.
-And that's the 150% AMI, which means that a family making about $150,000 can use this.
-Potentially, yes.
Really, the, the way it was designed, we're going to support multifamily developments, so apartment development for those below market rate.
So you know, most of the programs we run at the division will be for 60% AMI and lower.
That is pretty typical.
We can go up to 80% area median income-- sorry --in some cases, but once you get above 80% of area median income, there are really no resources available to assist folks in their housing.
And as you and everybody else knows, it's been well documented, virtually everybody at an average income has potentially a housing issue.
-Yeah, it's tough, because you're so right about that.
But then there are so many low-income people in need of housing.
And according to the National Housing Coalition, there's about a 78,000-unit shortage.
How do you justify money going toward middle-income earners?
-Because we need it all across the spectrum.
There is a component to the AB540 bill that actually addresses, like low-income housing tax credit development, which is our traditional financing.
And in the initial awards, we've provided funding to two particular projects here in Southern Nevada.
And so we are addressing that through this fund.
But really, the idea is to create home ownership opportunities.
That was really what the focus of the task group was.
And the idea being, yes, Nevada has lots and lots of renters; but if we can create homeowners from those renters-- In other words, they're already paying 1,500, potentially 2,000 and up in rent.
That'll cover a mortgage in many, many cases.
So if we can provide them the ability to actually get into home ownership, that does two things: Number one, it builds generational wealth, creates a better sense of community, all those things that come along with home ownership.
But it will also free up an apartment for somebody else to come into.
So it kind of works its way up the ladder, if you will.
-So the developers who are building these homes using the state funds, they do have to repay this money.
And that's part of this revolving fund.
When did the state become aware of that idea?
It seems kind of new across the country.
-Yeah.
It is new across the country.
And so the Nevada Housing Division, effectively, is the state housing finance agency.
There's 54 of them across the country.
50 states, each state has one, DC, New York City has their own, Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico.
So we all typically are tax credit allocators to develop that traditional affordable housing that I first mentioned, the Low Income Housing Tax Credit projects.
-Which is a national level.
-Right.
That is federal monies and authority that come in from the federal government.
And that's been our traditional role.
Well, again, post-pandemic, from the standpoint of a housing finance agency and every housing finance agency are feeling pressures to do things differently.
And a lot of it was emergency rental assistance and making sure people were housed stably during the pandemic.
You know, there's homelessness issues.
There's the whole ecosystem of housing issues that typical housing finance agencies deal with.
As we come further out from the pandemic, we are all seeing the same struggles for middle-income earners.
So there's probably a handful of states that are doing exactly what Nevada is doing.
And I'm not going to say we're late to the game.
We were able to model some of our programs or at least see the successes and some of the challenges that other states were having as we developed this.
-We talked on the phone ahead of this about the Home Means Nevada initiative.
You were in this role when that was rolled out.
Those were ARPA funds from the pandemic.
That was Governor Steve Sisolak.
I think $500 million for affordable housing in the state.
That sounds like a giant number.
And I believe you told me, you know, We thought it would be easy to give that money away, and we learned it's not so easy.
It's more nuanced than that.
Is that part of this discussion?
What did you learn from that?
-So thank you for the question and bringing it up, because that was a huge investment.
So those are federal funds.
That was the largest amount of monies, if you will, that was ever provided to the State of Nevada for housing.
The attainable fund complements and builds on that, because that's the single largest investment of state funds.
And there is a difference between federal dollars and state dollars and the flexibilities that you can do those things.
So to go back to the ARPA funds, we were restricted at basically 80% of area median income.
-And those were one-time use funds.
-One-time use funds.
-Whereas, this Attainable Housing Account-- Please continue.
I don't want to cut you off.
-No.
That's fine.
However, as you mentioned, it's hard to give this money away.
A lot of that money at the ARPA, SLFRF funds, actually went out as loans to some of these multifamily developments.
So that money will return.
It will be a long time.
It'll probably be about 20 or 30 years before that comes back.
So somebody in my seat, you know, in 20--, I don't know, 2040, 2060, is going to see this money come back to the state, and it's going to be like, Where'd this come from?
-Oh, wow.
Okay.
So that was the 500 million?
-That was the 500 million.
-I didn't realize there was any return on that.
-Yeah.
Long time, but-- -Okay.
And compare that to what you're doing now, that's a shorter amount of time?
-Right.
What the Division is trying to do is parlay that 133 million, if you will, a number of times in a shorter period of time.
So when we were looking at the funding projects that we were going to award, we really honed in on a couple things--certainly the financial capability of the developer to do the project, but, really, how fast could those monies return and the project readiness.
-I'm glad you brought up the project readiness and the ability to repay the loan, because you just came from a project.
And please tell us about that.
-Sure.
That was the Paradise Trails project.
It's literally around the corner from your studios here.
It's 29 homes, so it's a small project.
It's an infill project.
They received, or will be receiving, up to about 800,000.
To use 800,000 to create home ownership opportunities for 29 families to make that affordable and attainable is a pretty good return on investment.
So in that particular instance, that's actually going to be married with some things that the builder is doing, and then we will be providing on those particular homes, if you qualify, down payment assistance.
And they will-- The developer is doing an interest rate buydown and reducing some of the cost of homes.
So what a great way to do this.
Now, that money, because it's down payment assistance, won't return in two to four years unless somebody moves, because it is the Housing Division will actually have a second on the home.
So it's not forgivable; you will have to pay it back.
But it will allow somebody to literally get into those homes for probably starting at about $2,000 a month.
-Okay.
So we have thoroughly covered the loan aspect of this account, but not all of the state's funding for the development of housing will be repaid.
That's because there are two grants for supportive housing.
One is for a Volunteers of America project in Reno, and the other is for Visions Park in Las Vegas.
That's the Blind Center of Nevada's 100-unit affordable housing complex near Las Vegas Boulevard and Washington Avenue.
It's scheduled to open in July, and Nevada Week got to meet one of its future residents.
-[singing] ♪ That's why I'm easy ♪ ♪ I'm easy like Sunday morning ♪ -Will Stoakely's life has been the opposite of easy.
-♪ Why in the world would ♪ ♪ anybody put chains on me ♪ -He says he began singing when he became blind nearly 20 years ago.
(William Stoakley) Well, I inherited glaucoma.
I didn't know I had it.
I was ignorant to it.
My grandmother had it.
No one else in my family but my grandmother, so I ended up having it and not getting regular eye checkups.
It just got worse.
So I started off seeing people that looked like shadows, and then eventually it just went totally dark.
I was trying to survive blind, you know, living where I could.
Sometimes I had sleep on people's floors and, you know, anybody that could help me, because when I lost my job, I used all my savings.
So here I am.
-Will says the Blind Center helped him learn how to live without his sight and found him housing he could afford.
-After they helped me get the place, they showed me the ropes on how to maneuver blind.
I got to meet some other members that made me feel a lot more comfortable.
-But he's anxious for workers to finish construction on the center's newest venture, [sound of machinery] Visions Park, an affordable housing complex for people who are blind and visually impaired.
-I don't think anybody would want to live where I'm at now, you know, but I know it's not going to be long.
I'm be one of the first ones moving in here.
-Will is one of more than 100 people who will live here.
And Todd Imholte, president of the Blind Center of Nevada, says more than 300 people have asked to be on the waiting list.
(Todd Imholte) Some people on our interest list are homeless.
Some of them are people like Will who finally got a place to live about a year ago but are living in unsafe and unhealthy environments.
You know, when you're blind, as you can imagine, you can't see if you have a bug problem, right?
So if he's got cockroaches running around or some other bugs, he had some lady come into his house, he told me, to sweep his kitchen because he can't see where he's sweeping.
And she told him, You have a bug problem.
You need to talk to the landlord here.
And so, you know, again, imagine that times, you know, a bunch of people who are living below the extreme poverty level who are making a social security check, trying to make a living.
As we know for all of us, the rents and mortgages have gone up in our community.
And we're one of the states with the lowest available affordable housing in the country.
-But Imholate says that's changing and points to the multiple sources of funding for Visions Park, including federal, state, and local dollars.
-So the jurisdictions all have their oars in the water here, and so they're all trying to fix this housing problem.
It's going to take a while, but with this kind of an impact and this kind of a story to say, hey, what can we do as a collaborative effort to get this done, this is a story that will last forever.
-The Blind Center not only owns the land underneath Visions Park but sits right next to it as well.
-It's been proven that nationally, when you can add supportive services to housing, it makes the life of an individual better.
And so the proximity of the services of food security next door, we have fitness center, we have classes, we have technology training and job training, and music and art.
And so there's many, many things that complement an individual who's blind that is in walking distance.
-And it's a walk Will says he's eager to make from his future home.
What do you think about when you think about moving into this place?
What will that be like?
-As soon as they blow the whistle, I'm ready.
I'm ready today.
-So that's 100 units.
But as we mentioned earlier, there's a need for 78,000 units in the state for extremely low-income households.
So when I asked at the beginning of the show, will this bill work to solve the affordable housing issue, I guess I know the answer, and that's no, right?
-Yeah.
It's not a panacea for everything that ails us.
One at a time.
You know, if we can help Will get into housing, great.
And I heard that they have a 300-person waiting list.
We know that we have a problem of huge proportions, but you got to start somewhere.
You got to start doing things.
You can't just throw up the white flag and say, This isn't going to work.
So we continue to butt our heads against walls.
We continue to try to push through those walls using all kinds of interesting and different things that we can.
-There is an aspect of affordable housing development that deals with financing, where these are built and then, after a certain amount of time, they can become market rate housing.
Whoever owns them can say, I'm going to now charge what a regular apartment complex would charge, for example.
How are you preventing that from happening with the units that you are financing?
-So there's a couple ways that we do that.
And what you're really referring to is our traditional low-income housing tax credit properties.
The first thing is if they sign with the Division, if the Division is providing them debt financing, they have to be affordable for 30 years.
Depending on the program they go through, potentially up to 50 years.
So there's a 30- to 50-year secure, it's going to be affordable.
They can get out, per federal law, at 15 years if they choose to.
The Division has, when we issued the tax credits at the very beginning, at the outset, requires that developer to waive the right to do that.
So the only way that a developer is not going to meet that 30-year criteria is if they foreclose--the property gets foreclosed upon, and they get into some financial troubles, things of that nature.
Very rarely happens.
These are really, really safe investments, and they are investments for the investors, the developers in the state.
So and then we'll come through, typically at about 15 to 20 years, working with the development community to preserve those.
And so sometimes it's what we call preservation and rehabilitation, where we'll come through, we'll provide additional tax credits, which will incentivize them to go for another 30 years.
So we have a couple of tools in our tool belt.
They're limited because of the federal funding that is provided.
And then we also have gap funding.
And you know, we've historically used things like state tax credits, which we'll be out of.
So we're going to go to the next legislative session saying, Hi, can we have some additional state tax credits?
We were allocated 40 million in 2019.
We didn't even effectuate those because of the pandemic, because they're a hit against the general fund.
But in the past, this upcoming year, and the previous three years, we'll have expended all of those tax credits.
-And I nearly forgot one of the most obvious questions.
What about tariffs?
How are they impacting these developments?
-So we've seen it.
Not just tariffs, interest rates, land costs, virtually everything that comes down the pike is kind of going against the tide, if you will.
That's the world we live in.
So, yes, we try to be as judicious as we can when we underwrite a project and make sure it works.
Developers are savvy.
And the developers who typically play in with the state and the federal government, particularly in the tax credit program, they're incredibly smart, because it's a different kind of development than what a traditional market rate developer will do.
And thank God we have them, because it is a little bit burdensome.
But the mission is right.
So that's not to put shade on those developing any kind of housing, but the-- in the affordable space, you kind of have to have a passion for it.
-It's complicated.
-It's extraordinarily complicated.
So we see those, whether it's tariffs, whether it's interest rates, we're trying to work through that all the time.
And, yeah, it's just, it's the game we have to play.
-All right.
Steve Aichroth with the Nevada Division of Housing, thank you for joining Nevada Week.
We hope to have you back on.
-Thank you, Amber.
-It is time now for this month's "Your Brain Health Matters."
Right now, there is no cure for Alzheimer's disease.
But pushing back the impact of it, even just a few years, can be really important for patients and their families.
Nevada Week recently visited the UNLV Department of Brain Health, where Dr.
Jeff Cummings explained how a new category of drugs known as anti-amyloid therapies can delay some of the more severe symptoms of Alzheimer's.
And the three approved drugs that you talked about, those drugs do what?
(Dr.
Jeff Cummings) They use the body's own immune system to remove the abnormal protein that accumulates in the brain in Alzheimer's disease.
So there's a cell that keeps germs out of your brain, and we trick that cell into thinking that the protein of Alzheimer's disease is foreign and should be removed.
-So to be clear, they are not cures, those drugs, but they are preventing or they are slowing?
How would you describe what they do?
-They slow the disease by about 30%.
So what we can see is that at the end of an 18-month trial, the patients who received treatment were five months better off than the patients who did not receive treatment.
So if you translate that into several years of therapy, you have more time to drive, more time to be autonomous, more time with the grandchildren, more time to travel, to do all the things you want to do when you're in your later years of life.
-When someone is found to have Alzheimer's, what are the treatments available to them, and what does that process look like?
-When someone is confirmed to have Alzheimer's disease, and you know that we have new blood tests that help us with that process, then one would enter the discussion based on how severe the symptoms were.
If the patients had very mild symptoms, they would-- they would be at least offered these new types of drugs that remove the protein from the brain.
If they were in more advanced stages of the disease, we have drugs, pills, that improve temporarily the memory of the individual involved.
-What side effects exist with these treatments?
-There's one type of side effect that we are particularly concerned with, and that has to do with leaky blood vessels.
As we remove the protein from the brain with the drug, we also remove that same protein from the blood vessel, and that allows it to leak for the first few months after we introduce the drug.
So a few patients develop swelling of the brain and sometimes even blood in the brain through this kind of vessel opening.
And that's why we do several MRIs early in the course, because those vessels heal and therefore that process, that side effect, is limited to the early phase of initiating the therapy.
We can manage that successfully in almost all patients, but only if we monitor it and manage it appropriately.
-Dr.
Cummings says one of the biggest barriers to patients getting these drugs is a lack of knowledge by physicians and also how complex it can be to administer them.
Trials are already underway on the next generation of these drugs, and they aim to cut down the amount of time a patient is required to take them and reduce side effects.
That is all for this week's edition of Nevada Week.
Thank you for joining us.
And for any of the information discussed in this show, including a link to the Blind Center of Nevada and the state's housing division, go to vegaspbs.org.
And we'll see you next week on Nevada Week.
♪♪♪
Finding Solutions for Nevada’s Housing Crunch
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S8 Ep38 | 16m 6s | Nevada’s housing administrator explains a new 2025 legislative bill to boost attainable housing. (16m 6s)
How a New Family of Drugs Can Work for Alzheimer’s Patients
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S8 Ep38 | 4m 6s | A new class of drugs targets brain proteins to fight the effects of Alzheimer’s Disease. (4m 6s)
A New Home for Blind and Visually Impaired People in Southern Nevada
Video has Closed Captions
Clip: S8 Ep38 | 5m 28s | The Blind Center of Nevada opens new low-income housing for the blind and visually impaired. (5m 28s)
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